Posts Tagged ‘Steve Von Till’


NEUROSIS ODDS AND ENDS UNSURPRISINGLY PROVE TO BE BETTER THAN NO NEUROSIS AT ALL

Friday, September 10th, 2010 at 1:30pm by

Neurosis are one of the best metal bands around much in the same way David Lynch is one of the best directors in American cinema: the vast, vast majority of people who encounter his movies, at best, don’t get the big deal. Neurosis aren’t a band that are easy to get into: they don’t have brews-and-BBQ-ready riffs, they’re steeped in noise and occasionally apocalyptic folk, and their M.O. for song lengths is looong. But like all difficult art, if they get their hooks in you, you’re a fan for life. Neurosis are known for harnessing soul-shaking power and crafting it into near-perfect (or, in some case, plain ol’ perfect) albums and increasingly rare-yet-transformative live appearances; their slavishly devoted fan base (which, if you’re remarkably simple and haven’t noticed, this writer is certainly among them) will tell you we’re lucky to exist in a time in which they’re still active and present. Neurot Records (helmed by the band themselves) have two new releases that further illustrate that point: yet another reissue of their classic Enemy of the Sun album and Live at Roadburn 2007, a solid capturing of their headlining set at their curated edition of the eponymous festival. Though neither are particularly essential (unless you haven’t heard Enemy of the Sun yet), they’re still a meaty bone thrown to fans waiting three years for a follow-up to Given to the Rising, surely enough to gnaw on in the meantime.

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THE SAME, BUT DIFFERENT: CONVERGE’S AXE TO FALL

Monday, October 19th, 2009 at 12:30pm by

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An initial impression of Axe to Fall, Converge’s latest bruiser, is that it’s a little too simplistic: the vast majority of the album find the band rocking more balls out than they have since their early days. Even “Worms Will Feed” and “Damages,” two slower tracks, feel more like uneasy breathing room than the expansive, emotional dalliances of You Fail Me’s “In Her Shadow” or No Heroes’ “Grim Rose/Black Heart.” Even despite Axe to Fall’s two further-out-than-ever-before closing songs, the majority of the album feels slight, missing a key element of what had made the band as exceptional as they are up until now. With No Heroes finding the band at once at their grindiest and most experimental, something about Axe to Fall feels empty.

Of course, initial impressions don’t do a Converge album justice; if the band are known for anything, it’s marrying the deceptively simple and the brilliantly complex. Despite its tendency to be more gruff than any modern Converge release, Axe to Fall features some of the band’s tightest, most interesting songwriting, as well as providing one of the most satisfying repeat listens of any Converge album. Compact but alarmingly dense, the band have never been this comfortable putting their heads down and charging at you, with a relentlessness that’s almost militaristic in its approach. More than just a bunch of throw-aways before its wildly expansive ending, Axe to Fall stands eye level with their genre-defining full length debut (Petitioning the Empty Sky) or their genre-shattering masterpiece (Jane Doe). Though foolish and cynical to think otherwise, the band are still as good as they’ve ever been, with no signs of coasting despite having been around exponentially longer than most of the hardcore bands they came up with.

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JACOB BANNON OF CONVERGE: THE METALSUCKS INTERVIEW

Thursday, October 15th, 2009 at 12:00pm by

bannon1Axe to Fall, Converge’s once-again excellent new album, is yet another stylistic shift: the majority of it is devoted to the band playing harder and more technically than they have in their post-Jane Doe era, while the closing two songs finding them venturing further away from their comfort zone than they ever have before. But even though guitarist Kurt Ballou darts all over the fretboard more than usual, vocalist Jacob Bannon changes nothing about his performance, from the breathless rambling on opener “Dark Horse” to his trademark pterodactyl-like shriek over the course of the album. But this isn’t to say that he’s in a state of creative stasis while the rest of the band moves outwards: Bannon’s hellacious scream is just as much a part of Converge’s uniqueness as is Ballou’s nimble riffing. Bannon’s work on Axe to Fall is as savage as it’s ever been, and once again adds weight and disturbing depth to the album’s metallic hardcore-fueled chaos.

Jacob Bannon’s place in metal, hardcore, and—for better or worse—metalcore is massive, with his trademark vocals incalculably influential and lyrics favoring the abstract over the melodramatic. Even outside of Converge, Bannon manages to be prominent, with a successful visual art career and running hardcore label Deathwish Inc. A surprisingly normal sounding (at least in terms of how he sounds on record), introspective guy, Bannon comes off as both wise about the metal and hardcore world while still impressed by and interested in it. In a lengthy interview with MetalSucks, he discussed the musical and lyrical intricacies of Axe to Fall, his approach to artwork in comparison to his vocal work, and people’s changing attitudes toward heavy music as they age.

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